Abstract

Brown bears (Ursus arctos) hibernate for 5–7 months without eating, drinking, urinating, and defecating at a metabolic rate of only 25% of the summer activity rate. Nonetheless, they emerge healthy and alert in spring. We quantified the biochemical adaptations for hibernation by comparing the proteome, metabolome, and hematological features of blood from hibernating and active free-ranging subadult brown bears with a focus on conservation of health and energy. We found that total plasma protein concentration increased during hibernation, even though the concentrations of most individual plasma proteins decreased, as did the white blood cell types. Strikingly, antimicrobial defense proteins increased in concentration. Central functions in hibernation involving the coagulation response and protease inhibition, as well as lipid transport and metabolism, were upheld by increased levels of very few key or broad specificity proteins. The changes in coagulation factor levels matched the changes in activity measurements. A dramatic 45-fold increase in sex hormone-binding globulin levels during hibernation draws, for the first time, attention to its significant but unknown role in maintaining hibernation physiology. We propose that energy for the costly protein synthesis is reduced by three mechanisms as follows: (i) dehydration, which increases protein concentration without de novo synthesis; (ii) reduced protein degradation rates due to a 6 °C reduction in body temperature and decreased protease activity; and (iii) a marked redistribution of energy resources only increasing de novo synthesis of a few key proteins. The comprehensive global data identified novel biochemical strategies for bear adaptations to the extreme condition of hibernation and have implications for our understanding of physiology in general.

Highlights

  • Brown bears (Ursus arctos) hibernate for 5–7 months without eating, drinking, urinating, and defecating at a metabolic rate of only 25% of the summer activity rate

  • Total digests were subjected to high resolution quadrupole orbitrap mass spectrometry to obtain label-free quantification of plasma proteins across 4 orders of magnitude of molar concentration

  • We calculated winter/ summer (W/S) ratios of protein and metabolite levels and blood cell counts for each individual bear, after which we calculated the mean and the p value from paired t tests for each factor

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Summary

Hibernation Survival Strategies in Brown Bear

We have subjected paired winter and summer bear plasma samples to mass spectrometric-based label-free quantitative proteome analyses, to targeted metabolome analyses of phospholipids, hexose sugars, and amine-containing compounds, and to hematological analyses, including functional coagulation factor analyses. Such quantitative analyses have not been carried out on a global scale before in bears and should provide the solid foundation for specific hypotheses and insights in the regulation of mammalian hibernation physiology. We document that levels of innate antimicrobial proteins protecting health are significantly increased in hibernation compared with summer activity, when adapted immunity takes over. Our data provide a significant and unexpected clue to the regulation of hibernation physiology by sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), the levels of which increased 45-fold in hibernation inactivity over summer activity

Results
Functional data
Discussion
Experimental Procedures
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